From Insull to Enron: Corporate (Re)Regulation After the Rise and Fall of Two Energy Icons

From Insull to Enron: Corporate (Re)Regulation After the Rise and Fall of Two Energy Icons

Maurer School of Law: Indiana University Digital Repository @ Maurer Law Articles by Maurer Faculty Faculty Scholarship 2005 From Insull to Enron: Corporate (Re)Regulation After the Rise and Fall of Two Energy Icons William D. Henderson Indiana University Maurer School of Law, [email protected] Richard D. Cudahy U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit Follow this and additional works at: https://www.repository.law.indiana.edu/facpub Part of the Business Organizations Law Commons, and the Energy and Utilities Law Commons Recommended Citation Henderson, William D. and Cudahy, Richard D., "From Insull to Enron: Corporate (Re)Regulation After the Rise and Fall of Two Energy Icons" (2005). Articles by Maurer Faculty. 308. https://www.repository.law.indiana.edu/facpub/308 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Faculty Scholarship at Digital Repository @ Maurer Law. It has been accepted for inclusion in Articles by Maurer Faculty by an authorized administrator of Digital Repository @ Maurer Law. For more information, please contact [email protected]. FROM INSULL TO ENRON: CORPORATE (RE)REGULATION AFTER THE RISE AND FALL OF TWO ENERGY ICONS Hon. RichardD. Cudahy* & William D. Henderson** I. IN TR OD U CTION ................................................................................... 36 II. INSULL AND ELECTRICITY .............................................................. 39 A. Insull's Origins and Early Career, 1859-1892 ................................. 39 B. Insull's Early Years as a Utility Operator, 1892-1912 ...................... 41 1. Chicago Edison ............................................................................ 41 2. Insull Creates and Perfects a New Industry: Electric Utilities .......... 45 3. Insull and the Movement for State Regulation of Electricity ........... 46 C. Middle West Utilities and the Coming of the Holding Company Era, 19 12- 1926 ........................................................................................ 5 1 D. The Rise and Fall of Insull as an Icon, 1926-1932 ............................. 55 1. The Public Utility Holding Company .......................................... 56 2. The Frank Smith Episode and the FTC Investigation .................. 59 3. Cyrus Eaton, the Great Crash, and Control of the Insull Empire .... 62 4. The Collapse of the Insull Empire .............................................. 65 E. Insull's Crim inal Trials ..................................................................... 69 III. POST-INSULL UTILITY REGULATION: THE RISE AND FALL OF NEW DEAL REFORMS ....................................................................... 72 A. The New Deal Reforms and the Regime of State Regulated Utilities ....73 B. Exhaustion of Economies of Scale and the Environmental Movement ..78 C. PURPA, the Energy Policy Act, and the Deregulatory Ethos ............. 79 D. Enron Moves into the Limelight ....................................................... 83 IV. NSULL AND ENRON: REFLECTIONS ON TWO ENERGY ICONS ...91 A. Leverage, Disclosure and Risk .......................................................... 93 B. Politics, Speculation, Regulation ....................................................... 98 Senior Circuit Judge, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit; B.S., U.S. Military Academy; J.D., Yale Law School. Associate Professor, Indiana University-Bloomington School of Law; B.A., Case Western Reserve University; J.D., University of Chicago Law School. The authors thank Alfred Aman, J. William Hicks, John Moot, and John Wasik for comments on various drafts of this Article and Joseph Efeyemineni Abugu, Bradley Klein, Jody Madeira, and Shawn Zawisza for their excellent research assistance. In addition, we would like to acknowledge the substantial editorial contributions of Lauren Mohr and Terry Allen of the Energy Law Jour- nal. ENERGY LAW JOURNAL [Vol. 26:35 C. How Do W e Regulate Electricity? ................................ ........................ 104 V . C ON C L U SIO N .......................................................................................... 110 1. INTRODUCTION For most Americans, the sudden and horrific collapse of the Enron Corpora- tion will go down as the most shocking and significant corporate event of their generation. Yet, remarkably, it is a surprise to many people that the New Deal regulatory framework - which was recently reformed and toughened in response to the Enron debacle - was itself created in the wake of a strikingly similar cor- porate crash. In late 1931 and early 1932, investors, business executives, and or- dinary citizens looked on in horror as Samuel Insull's grand and seemingly in- vulnerable electric utility holding company empire foundered without warning and slipped into receivership. This debacle wiped out the holdings of 600,000 shareholders and 500,000 bondholders,1 most of whom believed that they had entrusted their savings to a safe and secure electric utility enterprise. As Insull (much like Enron seventy years later) was vilified in the press, candidate Franklin D. Roosevelt seized upon this business disaster to press his case for corporate reform during the 1932 presidential campaign. Though Insull and his crash are today largely forgotten, we are still subject to its regulatory af- termath-measures that were adopted "in direct response to Insull's real or al- leged doings .... , This legislation, a substantial part of the New Deal regula- tory agenda, includes the Securities Act of 1933, the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the Public Utility Holding Company Act of 1935, the Federal Power Act of 1935, and the legislation creating the Tennessee Valley Authority and the Ru- ral Electrification Administration. 3 As noted by one Insull historian, "It is no ex- aggeration to see in the legislative innovations' 4 of the New Deal a phoenix arising from the ashes of the Insull empire. At least superficially, the Insull failure and the Enron collapse seventy years later appear to have followed virtually identical scenarios. 5 For example, both companies rose to dizzying levels of economic power and political and public adulation. Virtually overnight, both icons plummeted ignominiously into bank- ruptcy, giving rise to frantic hand wringing and finger pointing by politicians and 1. See JOEL SELIGMAN, THE TRANSFORMATION OF WALL STREET: A HISTORY OF THE SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION AND MODERN CORPORATE FINANCE 22 (Houghton Mifflin Co. 1982) [hereinafter SELIGMAN]. 2. FORREST MCDONALD, INSULL 335 (Univ. Chi. Press 1962) [hereinafter MCDONALD]. 3. Id 4. ROBERT GRANT & JOSEPH KATZ, THE GREAT TRIALS OF THE TWENTIES: THE WATERSHED DECADE INAMERICA'S COURTROOMS 245 (Sarpedon 1998) [hereinafter GRANT & KATZ]. 5. See, e.g., John Micklethwait &Adrian Wooldridge, A CorporateCrisis? No, Just Business As Usual, WASH. POST, June 23, 2002, at B I (discussing corporate crises in the aftermath of the Insull and Enron deba- cles and noting that "the echoes of the current crisis are uncanny"); Peter G. Gosselin, Enron a Rerun of His- tory, L.A. TIMES, Feb. 22, 2002, at Al (opining that "Lay, Skilling and Enron could rightfully claim to be In- sull's historical heirs"); Rebecca Smith, Enron 's Rise and Fall Gives Some Scholars a Sense ofDeja Vu, WALL ST. J., Feb. 4, 2002, at Al (discussing the Insull debacle and noting that "many students of corporate history get a sense of deja vu as they watch the Enron saga unfold."). 20051 FROM INSULL TO ENRON the press. Apparently, everyone had been duped. Yet, a careful examination of the rise and fall of Samuel Insull reveals many interesting (and sometimes ironic) differences from the Enron debacle. Perhaps most striking is the fact that all of the Insull criminal and civil proceedings, which dragged on until Insull's death in 1938, ended in acquittals for Samuel In- sull and his large coterie of executives. In contrast, the federal laws that were passed in the aftermath of Insull have been successfully deployed to obtain sev- 7 eral criminal convictions of Enron figures (with possibly more to come) and numerous civil settlements. 8 Another fortunate and arguably related distinction between the Insull and the Enron eras is that, notwithstanding similar stock mar- ket collapses in 1929 and 2000, the country has thus far averted a severe eco- nomic depression in the wake of Enron. Thus, Insull's most consoling legacy may be that the full force of history has not repeated itself in full. There is nothing like a narrow escape from ruin to produce sober, level- headed reflection on matters of public policy. This Article suggests that our ru- minations on government regulation are more likely to draw the right conclu- sions if we understand the historical continuum that connects Insull with Enron. The setting for our analysis is the growth and maturation of the electric power industry over a span of 120 years. At two junctures - separated by a nearly sev- enty-year interval - the collapse of two energy titans, Insull and Enron, helped to galvanize major changes in the regulation of financial markets. Since the Enron experience is current and ongoing, as well as the subject of numerous discussions and analyses in a continuing torrent of books and articles, 9 its specific facts will be dealt with in a summary fashion. The Insull story, by contrast, is not well known to the modem reader, and will be described in some detail. The central lesson that emerges from a comparison of the Insull and Enron eras is not so much that we need to strengthen laws

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